| Antonio D. Tillis - 2005 - 163 páginas
...from the night world as he prepares for his daily tour of the globe turned upward for his inspection. "I am the eye with which the Universe / Beholds itself, and knows it is divine" (lines 3132; SP6-P, 368). Despite the cyclical movement of the poem — from dawn to... | |
| Robert D. Richardson - 2006 - 660 páginas
...come directly from two lines in Shelley's "Hymn of Apollo," written in 1820 and published in 1824. "I am the eye with which the Universe / Beholds itself and knows itself divine." 87. A Pluralistic Universe 1. PU, 113, 115, 117, 118, 220, 121. 2. PU, 130, 134. 3. PU, 1354. PI/,137,138.... | |
| Clive James - 2007 - 924 páginas
...incarnates the neo-Platonic idea of Shelley's that catapulted him to one of his wildest flights of vision: "I am the eye with which the universe / Beholds itself and knows itself divine." Pierre is heading for trouble. He has committed his soul to the care of Candy Christian, whose only... | |
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